Italian Bread
calls for2 cups water and 1/2 C powdered skim milk,can I just use 2 C skim milk?
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- Bev Letvak's Blog
calls for2 cups water and 1/2 C powdered skim milk,can I just use 2 C skim milk?
Finally, repaired my bread baking and moving to cookies. Looking for a relative low fat/cal cookie recipe tried an old Frank Ford recipe for oatmeal sweet bread using flaked oats, just a bit to crunchy.
Moved to a Good Housekeeping recipe that follows - the problem is the cookies(drop) stick to an oil cookie sheet. Tho crunchy and tasty used a butcher knife to slide under the cookies and end up with more broken pieces than whole cookies. My dough may not be thick enough as oil is substituted for margarine.
Recipe circa 1963
Semisweet oatmeal cookies
A little story on how I got here.
I have always loved bread and dough products, but due to irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), I've largely avoided it for many years. The fructans in flour, which contains oligosaccharides, are a cause for my stomach getting bloated. They are higher in rye and wheat than spelt, so I have been using spelt to make yeast breads or buns now and then.
Graphic comparing levels of FODMAPs in different flours.
No, we aren't revisiting the Roaring 20's or peeking at undergarments here (at least not right now!). Once more with a batch of the dmsnyder based Semolina Capriccioso, with a twist courtesy of alfanso. Since these are capricious by moniker I decided to give them each a different look. One long and one chubby batard, one and two scores across them respectively.
Lazy Gender Free Brioche
This recipe is a synthesis of two recipes. I like this recipe because you don’t have to use the mixer. The technique is based on what I saw on Cooks Illustrated. Except I don’t enjoy eating that much butter, and the recipe is based on Floyds Lazy Mans Brioche.
Dough
500g bread flour
250g milk
2 eggs
50g sugar
15g instant yeast
5g salt
1 stick (113g) unsalted butter, diced
Filling
1/2 cup chocolate chips (optional)
So, I was browsing on Instagram and ran across a post by @nanascakekitchen for a really yummy looking dessert. It turned out to be a recipe for Sourdough Latvian Apple Cake by Teresa Greenway at Northwest Sourdough. So, I just had to try it. It's a fun way to use up any extra starter you might have. And it turned out so well that my daughter and her family told me that I need to make another one soon!
This weekend I baked a new loaf and as I did so, I marveled at how far along I have come as a bread baker -- at least when it comes to making the sourdough boule. I'm not going to lie... this is not matzoh. But, if it were, I would be very very wealthy.
The formula is my own though I am certain others have made it before me.
64% All Purpose Flour (King Arthur)
27% Whole Wheat Flour
9% Whole Rye Flour
2% Salt
1% wheat germ (totally optional. I had it and wanted to use it)
82% Hydration
As promised. Here are my Cantonese mooncakes. There are many styles of mooncakes in China depending on the region but Cantonese mooncakes (廣式月餅) are my favorite. It is the "special mooncake" here in our country and the style of mooncake most commonly seen in the west. They are only available once a year and in Chinatown only. I'm a bit of a traditionalist when it comes to mooncakes. My absolute favorite is a classic lotus paste with double salted duck egg yolk but I'll be happier if I can find triple or even quadruple ones.
I've been well and truly bitten by the rye bug!
This weeks bake was a 70% rye, 109% hydration loaf, with sunflower seeds, green pumpkin seeds, raisins and i replaced some of the water with a dark beer!
I had to deviate from my normal MO of doing normal stretch and folds because the dough (or should i say, really thick batter) was way too wet. I just used a bowl scraper to kind of stretch the dough up and fold it over in the bowl for a few minutes.
Sorry about the picture really need to get a camera instead of relying on the tablet (any suggestions?).About the bread, it is the fourth loaf using yeast water and this one is entirely leavened with it. I also wanted to have a porridge bread and since millet makes a favorite it was used. The porridge was made by cooking one third cup millet in one half cup milk and one half cup water with a pinch of salt until the liquid was absorbed. The flours were 30g millet,65g Einkorn, 100g Turkey Red wheat, 120g white wheat, and 200g AP.